...and then they would realize its the people that buy the tickets, watch the games and basically are the reason why they get paid millions to play a game.
You have to remember that different cities have different relationships with their teams/players. Northeast cities like NY, Philly and Boston all have their reputations as tough places to play. The fan bases are rabid but the criticisms are sharp and quick to come and the vulture media plays it up fiercely. The Patriots over the last 10 years have been shielded from this attitude mostly because of their winning and Belichick masterfully putting the media on ignore. But its a tenuous shield at best and the vulture media are currently poking looking for weak spots. The reality is that for a Boston team, the Patriots get a relative free pass, even with the occasional booing. I think Pats players look at respective teamates on the Redsox, Celtics and Bruins and realize they have nothing to complain about.
I think this is very healthy that this is a hot topic.
IF your focal point is money, and money you spend to win, only, and be entertained, then you might want to stay home and save some dollars. That is not football.
Even the best get beat, and constantly some of the worst teams in the NFL make the SB.
A fan knows chance, belief, love, devotion, caring, disappointment, frustration, and loyalty. We all know the risk we take believing in at team and loving the players.
You can't excuse immaturity with a $ sign.
This is a family sport, that is suppose to be shared with our kids, and bind with our friends. This is not about money.
It has no positive impact, and hurts your players. So hurts their play, and frankly something a grown man should have the better sense not to do, because it is rude.
I would be shocked to see a father teaching his son to Boo his team. That is not acceptable.
I agree we have a different culture here, old south, but we did deal with this exact issue, and our conclusion was to stop it, and their is no place for that here.
Your fans need to come to their own conclusion. I only hope money doesn't trump the sports experience with your son and family, and how you act in front of them.
Be. courteous in winning and gracious in defeat.